Improved tetracycline repressors for gene silencing in mycobacteria. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Tetracycline repressor (TetR)-controlled expression systems have recently been developed for mycobacteria and proven useful for the construction of conditional knockdown mutants and their analysis in vitro and during infections. However, even though these systems allowed tight regulation of some mycobacterial genes, they only showed limited or no phenotypic regulation for others. By adapting their codon usage to that of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis genome, we created tetR genes that mediate up to approximately 50-fold better repression of reporter gene activities in Mycobacterium smegmatis and Mycobacterium bovis BCG. In addition to these repressors, for which anhydrotetracycline (atc) functions as an inducer of gene expression, we used codon-usage adaption and structure-based design to develop improved reverse TetRs, for which atc functions as a corepressor. The previously described reverse repressor TetR only functioned when expressed from a strong promoter on a multicopy plasmid. The new reverse TetRs silence target genes more efficiently and allowed complete phenotypic silencing of M. smegmatis secA1 with chromosomally integrated tetR genes.

publication date

  • January 27, 2009

Research

keywords

  • Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial
  • Gene Silencing
  • Mycobacterium
  • Repressor Proteins

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC2665214

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 64549137584

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1093/nar/gkp015

PubMed ID

  • 19174563

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 37

issue

  • 6